Judge Sarah Taft-Carter: 13 Who Made a Difference in RI in 2013

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Judge Sarah Taft-Carter: 13 Who Made a Difference in RI in 2013

Front and center in the pension reform debate: Rhode Island Superior Court Judge Sarah Taft-Carter.
Rhode Island Superior Court Judge Sarah Taft-Carter is perhaps the person now most front and center in pension reform in Rhode Island -- having overseen consent judgements in the Providence pension agreement last spring, and now the state awaits her word in the state mediated pension reform lawsuit, which could have major ramifications on the state's bottom line.

On the city-side, in March, Taft-Carter issued a ruling calling the deal agreed to by Providence's current firefighters, police officers and retirees a "fair, adequate and reasonable settlement" and "a shining example" for other cities and towns, as Providence moved to reduce the city's large structural deficit. While Providence finalized the agreement in April -- which capped pensions and suspended COLAs among other actions, the city will face a lawsuit of its own from 66 retired police and firefighters or their spouses.

Taft-Carter met with lawyers no less than a dozen times in 2013 for status updates regarding the lawsuit challenging the state's 2011 pension reforms. With the General Assembly weeks away, the decision handed down from Taft-Carter on the outcome of mediation will no doubt have a major impact on both the budget -- and politics.

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"While the budget certainly will need scrutiny, the 274 million ($112 local, $162 state) pound gorilla in the marble madhouse will be what the proposed mediated pension settlement will be and how the legislature wrestles with the gorilla in an election year," said Dan Beardsley, the Director of the RI League of Cities and Towns.


13 Who Made a Difference in RI in 2013

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